Question:
what type of sauce goes with roast beef?
i wish bob was my uncle dont you
2006-10-22 07:34:37 UTC
what type of sauce goes with roast beef?
46 answers:
?
2006-10-22 07:35:26 UTC
The juice from the pan you roasted the beef in. Just skim off the grease first.
QuiteNewHere
2006-10-22 08:00:34 UTC
Nice! You are having us all for a roast beef dinner ? YUM !!!!!



Anyway, the most common is the meats' own juice. And there

will be lots of those. You can either serve it as is : aus jus, with some buns on the side or thickened with flour to make gravy, which the majority of people are used to.



This is the most common sauce. Brown sauce. You see this everywhere, and I mean everywhere.

-------------------



Brown Sauce / Wild Mushroom Sauce (for Beef Tenderloin Filet)

Brown sauce is one of the most important leading sauces. It is used in the preparation of gravies, small sauces, stews and soups. It is generally prepared in large quantities and kept on hand in the commercial kitchen. Brown sauce is used to supplement natural gravy drippings when preparing gravies. It is also used if additional gravy is needed when preparing beef stew.





Yield: 3 gallons

Quantity Ingredient



2 gal.

1 lb. 8 oz.

1 lb.

1 lb.

1 lb.

1 lb.

2

2 tsp.

1 cup

Brown stock

Onion, cut rough

Celery, cut rough

Carrots, cut rough

Butter

Flour

Bay leaves

Thyme

Tomato Puree

Salt & pepper to taste

Preparation & Procedure



1. Cut the vegetables rough, using a French knife.

2. Prepare the brown stock.

3. Have all equipment and ingredients handy.

4. Place the butter in the saucepot and heat. Add the rough garnish (onions, celery and carrots) and sauté lightly.

5. Add the flour, making a roux, and cook for 8 minutes.

6. Add the hot brown stock, tomato puree and seasoning.

7. Bring to a boil, stir with a wooden paddle until thickened and smooth.

8. Continue to simmer for 1-2 hours, stirring frequently.

9. Strain through china cap into a stainless steel container.



For Wild Mushroom sauce, add 1 cup each of sliced sautéed portabella, button and oyster mushrooms, and burgundy wine.

Precautions & Safety Measures

While simmering sauce, be careful that it does not scorch.

When sautéing the garnish do not let it brown.

Exercise caution when cutting the rough vegetable garnish.

x

Related recipes:

Beef Tenderloin Fillet

-----------------------------



If the above does not sound good enough, you can try a tomato sauce based sauce, white wine sauce southwest style.



You can also buy satay sauce, or simply use Worchestershire sauce.
Tavita
2006-10-22 07:37:02 UTC
Make gravy with the juice in the pan from roasting plus some flour.

A lot of people like horse radish on roast beef, but it's not exactly a sauce per se.
scurry505
2006-10-22 07:38:00 UTC
A dark gravy goes well on roast beef, you can also spice up the gravy with a bit of A1, Tabasco or BBQ sauce (doesn't take much). You should also serve with potatos, onions and carrots (boiled or roasted in the roast beef broth).



Good luck! =)
XhappytalkX
2006-10-22 07:43:27 UTC
Horseradish Sauce with beef.
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:36:08 UTC
Horseradish sauce is lovely with roast beef.



To make the horseradish sauce, simply mix

2 rounded tablespoons hot horseradish

1 heaped tablespoon crème fraîche

2 level teaspoons wholegrain mustard

in the bowl you're going to serve it in.
shnorkings
2006-10-22 07:45:07 UTC
Horse radish sauce is awsome with roast beef, veggies, gravy and yorkshire puds. Ohhhhh man!
Tatty Ted
2006-10-22 08:39:44 UTC
I just love horse radish with roast beef or a bit of mustard
RockManRock
2006-10-22 07:37:14 UTC
Surely the perfect sauce partner for Beef is Dijon mustard - the king of mustards !
richard_beckham2001
2006-10-22 07:37:19 UTC
Horseradish
cheaper_bills
2006-10-22 07:46:18 UTC
Horseradish sauce. Incidentally, I believe horseradish is the only vegetable that actually contains the male hormone testosterone!
dreading_life
2006-10-22 07:44:15 UTC
WHY use a sauce. Decent meat that has been correctly matured has an excellent taste. Sauces date back to the days when the meat was so gamey you had to mask the taste.
IloveMarmite
2006-10-22 07:35:33 UTC
Just make a gravy using the stock from the roasting tin.
Candy
2006-10-22 13:24:52 UTC
You can either use the juices the meat was cooked in or horseradish that goes lovely with beef and roasties
LUCY
2006-10-22 08:10:07 UTC
Traditionally horseradish sauce.

But it reminds me of cold porridge. I much rather a nice drop of beef gravy.
vands01
2006-10-22 07:48:18 UTC
Deglaze the roasting pan with some red wine.
iwatchedthestarsfallsilently
2006-10-22 07:39:24 UTC
Horseradish.
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:36:24 UTC
Horseradish.
firelook
2006-10-22 07:36:58 UTC
Worchestershire sauce- although naked roast beef is always good!
i have no idea
2006-10-22 07:36:33 UTC
Mushroom
Smurfetta
2006-10-22 07:41:43 UTC
Au jus, bernaise, mustard sauce, bbq sauce, red wine sauce, black bean sauce, peanut sauce, home made beef gravy, stroganoff sauce,mushroom sauce, orange sauce, oyster sauce, sour cream sauce, whiskey sauce, garlic lime sauce,burgandy sauce, madeira sauce, tomatillo sauce..............

The possibilities are endless
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:38:46 UTC
Horse radish
anonymous
2006-10-22 11:06:06 UTC
"Pioneer-Brown Gravy Mix" Awsome and very easy and flavorful. Just follow dirrections on back, using your drippings as the liquid it calls for,(adding water or broth if needed).......every one will think you found out some grandmother's secret recipe!!!!!!!!!
junio130
2006-10-22 07:36:26 UTC
Try a good Bisto gravy with horseradish mixed in.....
Mark H
2006-10-22 12:15:35 UTC
You should serve it with a thin red wine gravy countaining finely chopped shallotts
bluebell
2006-10-22 07:37:29 UTC
a red wine sauce is nice or a creamy white wine and mushroom sauce
briangimma
2006-10-22 07:53:06 UTC
a nice onion sauce made with small onions (chopped will do) and slightly heavy with the pepper.
lastemperor
2006-10-22 07:37:01 UTC
peppered mushroom gravy or worcestershire sauce are two of the best options.
lou
2006-10-22 12:08:35 UTC
au jus then have creamy or regular horseradish sauce on the side!
kimmi
2006-10-22 15:41:15 UTC
horseradish,go to a recipe web site to make
imphilthe
2006-10-22 07:36:19 UTC
I personally like mushroom gravy on mine...with mmashed potatoes...yummy
just browsin
2006-10-22 07:35:42 UTC
horseradish sauce
Katrina Van Tassel
2006-10-22 07:35:49 UTC
Gravy.
Lisa P
2006-10-22 10:18:58 UTC
Mustard!!!
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:36:28 UTC
chopped onion+tomato souce+mint leaves+olive oil+thyme...put these in pan and make a souce :D
DONNA B
2006-10-22 08:45:05 UTC
horseradish or english mustard
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:35:37 UTC
I think barbecue sauce ....
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:39:04 UTC
onion gravy works well
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:35:55 UTC
Horseradish, nothing else will do.
anonymous
2006-10-22 08:53:06 UTC
i'd suggest gravy, preferbly bisto
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:43:54 UTC
horse radish
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:38:22 UTC
horseradish or mustard
anonymous
2006-10-22 07:36:18 UTC
horseradish apparently
Phil
2006-10-22 07:35:55 UTC
spicy mustard
Sir Sidney Snot
2006-10-22 07:35:37 UTC
horse radish
I know, I know!!!!
2006-10-22 07:36:26 UTC
au-jus


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